2,323 research outputs found

    Increased renal ANP synthesis, but decreased or unchanged cardiac ANP synthesis in water-deprived and salt-restricted rats

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    Increased renal ANP synthesis, but decreased or unchanged cardiac ANP synthesis in water-deprived and salt-restricted rats.BackgroundExperiments were performed to examine the effect of water deprivation and salt restriction on ANP synthesis in the kidneys and hearts of normal rats.MethodsA 4-day water deprivation (WD) and 7-day salt restriction (SR; 0.01% NaCl) were performed in 12 and 14 rats, respectively. Atrial natriuretic peptide (ANP) mRNA expression in the kidney was assessed with reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction coupled with Southern blot hybridization, while the ANP mRNA in the hearts was measured by Northern blot hybridization. ANP and angiotensin II concentrations in the extracted plasma were measured by radioimmunoassay. The molecular form of renal ANP-like protein was characterized by reverse phase—high-performance liquid chromatography (RP-HPLC).ResultsRenal outer and inner medullary ANP mRNA showed a respective 11-fold and ninefold increase in WD rats, and an eightfold and fivefold increase in SR rats as compared to corresponding control groups. Inversely, cardiac atrial ANP mRNA and plasma ANP were decreased in WD rats, whereas they did not change in the SR group. Plasma angiotensin II concentration increased in conjunction with the decrease of urine sodium excretion in both groups. RP-HPLC analysis revealed a 45% extraction of ANP in the WD rat kidneys, whereas only 3% ANP in the control kidneys migrated in a molecular form similar to cardiac atrial proANP.ConclusionsOur results demonstrate that water deprivation and salt restriction markedly enhance renal ANP mRNA, whereas water deprivation suppresses cardiac atrial ANP mRNA and plasma ANP concentrations. The current study indicates that renal ANP and cardiac atrial ANP appear to be two distinct systems regulated by different mechanisms and possibly exhibiting different intra-renal paracrine and systemic endocrine functions

    Tai Chi Chuan Exercise for Patients with Cardiovascular Disease

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    Exercise training is the cornerstone of rehabilitation for patients with cardiovascular disease (CVD). Although high-intensity exercise has significant cardiovascular benefits, light-to-moderate intensity aerobic exercise also offers health benefits. With lower-intensity workouts, patients may be able to exercise for longer periods of time and increase the acceptance of exercise, particularly in unfit and elderly patients. Tai Chi Chuan (Tai Chi) is a traditional Chinese mind-body exercise. The exercise intensity of Tai Chi is light to moderate, depending on its training style, posture, and duration. Previous research has shown that Tai Chi enhances aerobic capacity, muscular strength, balance, and psychological well-being. Additionally, Tai Chi training has significant benefits for common cardiovascular risk factors, such as hypertension, diabetes mellitus, dyslipidemia, poor exercise capacity, endothelial dysfunction, and depression. Tai Chi is safe and effective in patients with acute myocardial infarction (AMI), coronary artery bypass grafting (CABG) surgery, congestive heart failure (HF), and stroke. In conclusion, Tai Chi has significant benefits to patients with cardiovascular disease, and it may be prescribed as an alternative exercise program for selected patients with CVD

    Elucidation of the surface structure–selectivity relationship in ethanol electro-oxidation over platinum by density functional theory

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    This article was published by the Royal Society of Chemistry as an Open Access article. It is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Unported Licence.We have successfully built a general framework to comprehend the structure-selectivity relationship in ethanol electrooxidation on platinum by density functional theory calculations. Based on the reaction mechanisms on three basal planes and five stepped surfaces, it was found that only (110) and n(111) × (110) sites can enhance CO2 selectivity but other non-selective step sites are more beneficial to activity

    A Service-Oriented Healthcare Message Alerting Architecture in an Asia Medical Center: A Case Study

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    This paper illustrates how our development team has used some information technologies to let physicians obtain an instant abnormal laboratory result report for critical patient care services. We have implemented a healthcare message alerting system (HMAS) on a healthcare short message service (HSMS) engine and the distributed healthcare-oriented service environment (DiHOSE) in the National Taiwan University Hospital (NTUH). The HSMS engine has a general interface for all applications which could easily send any kind of alerting messages. Fundamentally, the DiHOSE uses HL7 standard formats to process the information exchange behaviors and can be flexibly extended for reasonable user requirements. The disease surveillance subsystem is an integral part of NTUH new hospital information system which is based on DiHOSE and the disease surveillance subsystem would send alerting messages through the HSMS engine. The latest cell phone message alerting subsystem, a case study, in NTUH proved that the DiHOSE could integrate the user required functions without much work. We concluded that both HSMS and DiHOSE can generalize and extend application demands efficiently

    Lack of Association between Hepatitis B Virus Infection and Polymorphism of Mannose-Binding Lectin Gene in Korean Population

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    Mannose-binding lectin (MBL) plays an important role in immune defense. This study was undertaken to investigate the association between hepatitis B virus infection and polymorphisms of MBL gene. We assessed the single nucleotide polymorphism at codon 54 in exon 1 of MBL in patients with hepatitis B virus infection and HBsAg negative controls in Korean population. A total of 498 enrolled subjects was classified into four groups. Group 1; Clearance, Group 2; Inactive healthy carrier, Group 3; Chronic hepatitis, Group 4; Liver cirrhosis. MBL gene polymorphisms at codon 54 led to three genotypes (G/G, G/A, A/A). When we divided subjects into clearance group (group 1) and persistence group (group 2-4), G/G genotype and A-allele carrier were observed in 55.6% and 44.4% in clearance group, 64.8% and 35.2% in persistence group (p=0.081), respectively. When hepatitis B virus persistent cases were divided into inactive healthy carrier (group 2) and disease progression group (group 3 and 4), MBL gene polymorphisms at codon 54 were not related to disease progression (p=0.166). MBL gene polymorphism at codon 54 was not associated with the clearance of hepatitis B virus infection nor progression of disease in chronic hepatitis B virus infection

    Effects of Cyclosporin A Therapy Combined with Steroids and Angiotensin Converting Enzyme Inhibitors on Childhood IgA Nephropathy

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    To evaluate the effects of cyclosporin A (CyA) on clinical outcome and pathologic changes in children with IgA nephropathy (IgAN), we retrospectively evaluated 14 children (mean age 8.9±2.9 yr; eight males, six females) who were treated with CyA and steroids. The starting dose of CyA was 5 mg/kg per day, and the drug level was maintained at 100-200 ng/mL. The mean CyA level was 183.8±48.3 ng/mL (range 120.7-276.0 ng/mL) and the mean duration of CyA therapy was 10.9±1.9 months (range 8-12 months). After CyA therapy the mean 24 hr urinary protein excretion declined from 107.1±35.1 mg/m2/hr to 7.4±2.4 mg/m2/hr (P<0.001) and serum albumin increased from 3.3±0.6 g/dL to 4.3±0.3 g/dL (P<0.001). At a follow-up biopsy the histological grade of IgAN was improved in seven (50%) of the 14 patients, remained the same in three (21%), and was aggravated in four (29%). Serum creatinine, creatinine clearance, and blood pressure did not differ before and after CyA therapy. Two patients (14%) showed CyA-induced nephrotoxicity at the second biopsy. Our findings indicate that CyA therapy may be effective in reducing proteinuria and regressing renal pathology in a subset of children with IgAN
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